Senate debates
Tuesday, 14 May 2024
Documents
Senate Estimates
1:10 pm
Malcolm Roberts (Queensland, Pauline Hanson's One Nation Party) Share this | Hansard source
I speak to this motion to take note. I have yet to read the document in full and in detail, yet its existence is very disturbing, as other speakers have already said. At Senate estimates, Anthony Albanese's office is putting words in the mouths of department heads. How can we trust their answers? We cannot trust this government. Repeatedly we're getting the suppression of democracy—repeatedly—and we're seeing arrogance. Let's have a look at some data, and then I'll come back to talking more about this document.
As of the end of December 2023—7 December, specifically—after 94 Senate sitting days in the 47th Parliament, Anthony Albanese's parliament, 14 guillotine motions have been agreed to. Under the previous Morrison government, in the 46th Parliament, 14 guillotine motions were agreed to. Now we start to see the difference. A total of 87 bills have been subject to the guillotine in the 47th Parliament under the Labor-Greens-teals-Pocock coalition led by Anthony Albanese. In the 46th Parliament, under the Morrison Liberals, there were 59. So we have seen almost 50 per cent more under this government, under the coalition that Labor formed with the teals, Senator Pocock and the Greens, quite often with Senator Jacqui Lambie's support.
They promised transparency and accountability. Instead we get the suppression of democracy, repeatedly. Arrogance—that's what we say it is. Arrogance. We see that the suppression of democracy is a form of control. Always beneath control there is fear. Of what is the Albanese Labor-Greens-teals-Pocock coalition afraid? It's afraid of truth and afraid, fundamentally, of an informed citizenry. They don't want people to know.
The media has seen copies of the document. 'The PMO's secret manual on sidestepping Senate estimates questions'—that's the headline in Capital Brief. The article says:
Capital Brief has seen a document sent by Anthony Albanese's office advising departments on how to handle questions on notice from Senate estimates. Current and former senators say the edict represents contempt of the Senate.
Contempt of the Senate is a very serious matter. Another article in Capital Brief says:
Current and former senators, lawyers and a former top judge have said the drafting of the document could result in contempt of the Senate.
… … …
Anthony Albanese's office has stood by a document it issued to senior bureaucrats which advised them how to sidestep Senate estimates questions on the basis that inquiries have "skyrocketed" since Labor came to government.
Well, that's your job! I don't care if they have skyrocketed. We'll keep asking questions. I'll get to the Prime Minister's office's manual—what we've seen of it so far; I haven't dissected it.
When the interests of several departments are involved, the Government Guidelines for Official Witnesses before Parliamentary Committees and Related Matters call for departments to consult with other departments as part of the drafting process. This includes instances where the same or similar Senate estimates questions on notice are asked of all or multiple departments and agencies. Why are you worried about different answers from different departments? Look at some of the topics covered—well, we'll go through that another time.
I know this is not a motion by leave to seek a variation of standing orders, but One Nation normally opposes them because the Senate should be focused, firstly, on Senate responsibilities and, secondly, on government business. We want the government to govern. Senate estimates, though, are a vital part of holding governments and bureaucrats accountable for taxpayer funds. Why do you hide from that? Anthony Albanese's department wants to hide the truth from the people.
We have seen the Fair Work Commission and the Fair Work Ombudsman stumbling through an answer to my questions attempting to get to the bottom of their complicity with the CFMEU and major multinational labour hire firms in stealing $30,000 to $40,000 per miner each year from thousands of casual miners in Central Queensland and the Hunter Valley. They hide the facts wilfully. The Fair Work Ombudsman office relies on fraud, repeatedly. The Labor minister for workplace relations ignores and diverts. It's embarrassing for departments. We look forward to reviewing the formerly secret document in detail, because democracy is at stake.
Question agreed to.
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